DOVER CANYON is located on Vineyard Drive in the northwest
quadrant of the Paso Robles appellation. Dan Panico, owner and winemaker of Dover Canyon, has long
believed that the northwest-running strip of calcareous soil along Vineyard
Drive is optimum for growing Zinfandel and Rhône varieties. Our estate vineyard, Tre Noce, features head-pruned, dry farmed
zinfandel and stress-irrigated syrah.
Our production is focused on small lots of wine, often vineyard
designated, from mountainous vineyards in the northwest corner of Paso Robles,
centering around the Dover Canyon, Templeton Gap, and Adelaida districts. Dan is well known for producing wines
with a silky, smoke-and-licorice profile and a focus on vineyard presence.
The
winery name, "Dover Canyon," comes from a steep east-west canyon that
slashes directly through the heart of northwest Paso Robles, bringing us a wind
tunnel effect of cool Pacific air every afternoon. The vineyard is named “Tre
Noce,” which is Italian for “three walnuts,”
in honor of the three remaining trees from the original El Paso de la Robles
rancho orchard, of which our property is a tiny portion. A small Dunn wine barn near our 1921
farmhouse serves as wine storage, tasting room and crush pad. The house and crush pad are on a hilltop
vectored between the Templeton Gap and Dover Canyon wind tunnels. In the low creek area of our property
is an old Diamond walnut processing facility which we have converted to wine storage. This larger building is in the Willow
Creek web of small north-south valleys which funnel cool winds from the
northern Adelaida range.
Summer
breezes are so brisk they will slide a full glass of wine right off the patio
tables. While Paso Robles has been traditionally thought of as excessively hot
and dry, the western hills lead into the Santa Lucia foothills and enjoy cool
breezes, strong diurnal temperature swings, 22 inches of rainfall a year, and
steep hillsides with varying soil patterns.
In
addition to our own zinfandel and syrah vineyard, winemaker and owner Dan
Panico buys fruit produced in the northwest corner of the appellation, from the
Templeton Gap microclimate to the Adelaida Hills district.
WELCOME TO OUR TASTING ROOM

